In a setback to the government’s Direct Benefits Transfer programme, its scheduled launch for the liquefied petroleum gas (LPG or cooking gas) subsidy on May 15 has been postponed.
This is because only 13 per cent of Aadhaar (the Unique Identification registration) numbers among the beneficiaries chosen for the launch areas have bank accounts in the 20 selected districts.
This is the second postponing of the DBT launch in LPG.
It was initially to be introduced from January 1, but the oil marketing companies said they couldn’t proceed so early.
When asked, Petroleum Minister M Veerappa Moily refused to comment on the issue.
The National Payments Corporation of India and State Bank of India are in charge of disbursement of money to customers’ accounts.
Though the petroleum ministry had earlier given a choice of using the National Population Register numbers, in addition to Aadhaar, for transfer of the LPG subsidy, the
Direct cash transfer on LPG and kerosene is expected to save Rs 15,000 crore (Rs 150 billion) on the subsidy.
Moily had earlier said the DBT on LPG would cover the entire country by October.
The OMCs have a database of 140 million customers.
To raise the seeding, the ministry is preparing to launch a massive print and audio-visual campaign on the issue.
A senior member in the Unique Identification Authority of India said, “We are always being blamed on the seeding. But the major issue is related to banks.
“None of these banks are cooperating.
Moreover, the process of finding beneficiaries and to get them enrolled is itself a major headache for us.
“If it is not getting rolled out, the blame should not be on UIDAI, as it is a common effort of various government branches.”
The 20 districts involved in the first phase covered Andhra Pradesh, Daman and Diu, Goa, Himachal Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala, Maharashtra, Pondicherry, Sikkim and Tripura.